There appears to be some debate in the Republican Party about just how to play President Obamas new move on immigration. Some Republicans, including Mitt Romney, have knocked Obamas motives but steered clear of the policys substance. Others, including Marco Rubio and Alberto Gonzales, are tentatively ">on board with the concept but have nonetheless criticized the political play it represents.

Then theres the third category of Republican, on display Saturday at the Faith & Freedom Coalition conference in Washington D.C. and into which falls Indiana Republican Senate nominee Richard Mourdock. The tea party-backed candidate  who upset longtime GOP Sen. Richard Lugar to get his partys nod  told TPM that Obamas new policy will bring in more illegal immigrants, and urged the next president to walk it back it as quickly as possible.

Absolutely it should be rolled back, he said.

There are other Republican hardliners reacting strongly to Obamas new policy. Rep. Steve King (R-IA), perhaps best known for warning Islamic terrorists are streaming across Americas southern border, is filing suit against the Obama administration to halt the new policy.

But by and large, the Republican attacks on the policy have focused on calling it a craven political act, rather than a dangerous move that will open the country up to more illegal immigration. Mourdock is not afraid to sound the alarm, calling on Romney to undo what Obama has done if he is elected president.

Every parent learns that if you reward bad behavior youre going to get more of it. While we can all say its a compassionate thing for the children who were ostensibly carried across the border in their mothers arms, it sounds compassionate to give them special privileges, which is what this decisions about. But the fact is we just rewarded bad behavior. Do we think were going to get more of it now or less of it now? I suspect were going to get more of it, and thats a bad thing. A better solution, Mourdock said, would be one modeled on the 2006 plan drafted by former Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN) and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX), aimed at spurring self-deportation, an idea Romney touted on the campaign trail.

Mourdock believed there was a way for his party to re-frame the immigration debate.

Marco Rubio and I spent some time talking about this just the other day and he says it brilliantly, he said. The Republican Party needs to be defined as the party of legal immigration.

Rubio has signaled he agrees with the goals of Obama immigration shift, calling it welcome news for many of these kids desperate for an answer, but warning it is only a short-term answer to a long-term problem.

Its a bid to get 800,000 more democrat votes. IF Obama had his way he would make all Prisoners, Mexican citizens, and Canadians able to vote—just as long as they vote for him and the Democrats—Now if they voted Republican—he would have them deported. Latinos are not stupid—they see this as what it is. You can’t win with just Blacks, Gays and Latinos. It is Amnesty with a new name.

..and homosexual behavior (Repeal of DODT and reversal of DOMA), abortion (Fluke’s mandatory contraceptives and ‘War on Women’), and NBPP/gang thuggery (”My son could have been Trayvon”, DOJ refusal to prosecute NBPP at polling place and NBPP’s issuing ‘Wanted Dead or Alive’ poster on a free white man).

I would offer this observation. Out of the 800k...I’m taking a fair guess that 200k fit into a profile of going into community college or university this fall (or still in high school). If you look at the qualifying data that you had to pass through to “fit”....someone had done a lot of work analyzing how this would work.

So you come to the remaining 600k (my humble number) of people that will get their work card over the next six weeks, and then walk out into the real world to find employment. With various states ranging from North Dakota at 3.0 and Nevada at 11 percent unemployment....reality will hit the 600k folks over the next 100 days.

Since this was all supposed to help in the swing states, then you start to look at things progressing. At best, I think that only half of the 600k remaining folks will have a job by October.

So the remaining unemployed and newly visa’ed folks will ask some stupid questions. Why isn’t the economy better? Why can’t they find jobs like the regular Americans? If you ask me....this is a back-fire situation by election day. True, these folks can’t vote. But their friends and associates who watch this whole thing unfold, will be part of the process.

The President right now could come out with complete citizenship for the fifteen million illegals in America today...but he can’t invent legal jobs for the fifteen million, or for that matter the fifty odd million folks who are unemployed or under-employed.

The best part of this story...is that a newly visa’ed guy who can’t find work after six or twelve months....doesn’t count for unemployed, because he never had a real job to start with. So these unemployed visa’ed guys....are just non-statistics for this administration now, and for the next term (if November goes that way).

we true conservatives (including the tea party) are a defacto third party already.

as a thought experiment, suppose by a miracle from God, ronald reagan stepped up tommorrow and said he was starting a conservative party with a candidate to be selected at a convention he was bankrolling.

The exec order basically says if you are under 30 years old, you can CLAIM that your parents brought you here illegally, not PROVE you were brought here illegally by your parents. INS is going to have fun processing all these claims.

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